Journal of Affective Disorders
Volume 86, Issue 1 , Pages 27-35, May 2005

Is low mood an adaptation? Evidence for subtypes with symptoms that match precipitants

  • Matthew C. Keller

      Affiliations

    • Center for Society and Genetics (UCLA), Box 951405, 1339 Murphy Hall, Los Angeles, CA, 90095, United States
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +1 734 678 2389; fax: +1 310 825 1435.
  • ,
  • Randolph M. Nesse

      Affiliations

    • Departments of Psychology and Psychiatry, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, United States

Received 18 August 2003; accepted 8 December 2004.

Abstract 

Background

Although severe depression is dysfunctional, the capacity to experience normal low mood may be useful in certain fitness-threatening situations. Moreover, if specific kinds of situations recurred often enough in the course of evolution, natural selection may have shaped partially differentiated subtypes of low mood that are parallel to the subtypes of anxiety that protect against different kinds of danger. To test this hypothesis, we examined how symptoms of low mood differ depending upon the precipitating situation, and whether these differences match expectations of symptoms useful in each kind of situation.

Method

337 subjects who experienced a period of low mood within the last year wrote accounts describing perceived causes of their low mood and they filled out the CES-D depression inventory. Seven symptom scales were derived from analysis of CES-D data. Independent judges blindly coded the accounts into one of six precipitant categories.

Results

Different untoward situations were associated with different symptoms that were predicted to be useful in those situations. Social losses (death of a loved one, romantic breakups, and social isolation) were associated with greater crying and arousal. Failure to reach a goal, stress, and winter seasons were associated with more fatigue and pessimism.

Discussion

These results suggest that natural selection shaped not only a generic state of low mood but also partially differentiated subtypes shaped to cope with specific situations that were associated with fitness losses among our ancestors.

Keywords: Depression subtypes, Evolution, Natural selection, Evolutionary psychology, Mood

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PII: S0165-0327(04)00441-0

doi:10.1016/j.jad.2004.12.005

Journal of Affective Disorders
Volume 86, Issue 1 , Pages 27-35, May 2005